4. Its percentage of ad revenue coming from mobile climbed from 65% to 70%

Much further down in the doc, however, was a revised cap table that showed how Twitter’s earliest investors will fare. In short, ridiculously well.

Here’s the breakdown:

Union Square Ventures (led Series A in 2007): 27.84m shares, 5.9%

Spark Capital (led Series B in 2008): 32.4m shares, 6.8%

Benchmark (led Series C in 2009): 31.57m shares, 6.6%

At last check, Twitter shares were being marketed at $31 per share on the private markets (working out to a $15.5 billion valuation). Let’s use that as a baseline, even though we’ve already seen one bank analyst issue a $50 per share target. Here’s what each firm’s stake would be worth, compared to the size of the fund out of which it invested in Twitter:

In other words, two of the three firms will more than double their entire fund based on just one investment. Benchmark will get there if Twitter stock goes just $1 higher ($32 per share).

And this doesn’t even account for the fact that both Spark and USV each did two secondary share sales. Twitter doesn’t break these out in its IPO documents (which is unusual) but, for example, it’s known that Spark owned 15% after its 2008 deal and invested inseveral subsequent rounds (again, its current stake is just 6.8%). Chances are that each firm may have already returned the fund on those sales, meaning that what comes in the IPO is just gravy…

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